“…Ebrahim (2003b, p. 194) suggests an approach to accountability that we adopt in this article, characterizing it as "the means through which individuals and organizations are held externally to account for their actions, and as the means by which they take internal responsibility for continuously shaping and scrutinizing organizational mission, goals, and performance." More specifically, accounting literature has recognized the potential for inappropriate accountability mechanisms to damage, rather than enhance, the social and environmental benefits that many NPOs seek to realize through their socially useful activities (Dixon, Ritchie, & Siwale, 2006;Ebrahim, 2003aEbrahim, , 2003bEbrahim, , 2005Najam, 1996;Unerman & O'Dwyer, 2006). Second, the emerging dominance of upward hierarchical accountability to donors at the possible expense of more holistic accountability to a broader range of stakeholders, especially beneficiaries, has created concerns that NPOs' accountability priorities are being distorted (Blagescu,De Las Casas, & Lloyd, 2005;Ebrahim, 2003aEbrahim, , 2003bEbrahim, , 2005O'Dwyer and Unerman, 2007).…”